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Vol. 56, Issue 6, 1138-1142, December 1999
Department of Pharmacology, Southern Illinois University School of
Medicine, Springfield, Illinois
Cocaine use poses a major health problem not only because of the
dependence it causes but also because of the generation of life-threatening cardiac arrhythmias following overdose. Elucidating the molecular mechanisms of action of cocaine, therefore, remains a
critical step in developing treatment for cocaine addiction and
preventing cardiac complications. Although the neurotransmitter transporters are suggested to be primary targets for cocaine, the
continued drug-seeking behavior of transporter knock-out mice suggests
the involvement of additional mechanisms. Several studies have shown
that voltage-gated calcium channel blockers can prevent the behavioral
and reinforcing effects of the drug and also cocaine-induced cardiac
events, including lethal ventricular fibrillation. However, the role of
voltage-gated calcium channels in cocaine-induced responses is not
clear. Herein, I show that cocaine, in pharmacological doses,
selectively and potently enhances L-type calcium channel currents in
isolated rat ventricular myocytes. This potentiation by cocaine is due
to an increase and decrease, respectively, in the calcium channel
opening and closing rates, with no apparent effects on
voltage-dependence or single-channel conductance. The effects of
cocaine are rapidly reversible and unaffected by prior ATP
S-induced channel phosphorylation. These results
suggest that cocaine directly binds and facilitates the opening of
L-type calcium channels. Importantly, elevated intracellular calcium
levels via this mechanism triggering second messenger pathways and gene
activation may contribute to many of the cardiovascular and central
nervous system effects of cocaine.
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